Issue no. 33, 2005 Published: Nov 04, 2005 |
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Europe approves multi-billion euro IT research program |
Microsoft hails 'strategic shift' |
Silicon chip works on the speed of light |
Smart directions for green ideas |
Invention: Video flasher |
Supercomputer doubles own record |
Finger-vein reader to foil car thieves |
Headset to remotely control humans |
Live speech-translation technology unveiled |
Bird flu virus infects PCs |
Building a personalised network of digital devices |
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| Europe approves multi-billion euro IT research program |
Europe has outlined and approved a program of collaborative research in
IT, with plans to roughly double the budget of a forerunner program, to
more than 3bn euro. The new program, known as ITEA-2, follows on from
the Information Technology for European Advancement program (ITEA), and
is set to run from 2007 for eight years. It is aimed at continuing the
work of ITEA to support European companies maintain independence in
software-intensive systems for embedded applications.
The ITEA-2 program intends to mobilise a total of 20,000 person-years
over its full eight-year duration, double that of the existing ITEA
program. The first call for projects is set for 2006, to ensure a smooth
transition from ITEA, and funding proportions are expected to be the
same as in ITEA with governments putting up 35 per cent to 40 per cent
of the funding and industry paying the balance. The project is expected
to support job creation in automotive and aeronautics, the digital
consumerisation of the home, healthcare and medical systems. |
| Information Week
Nov 02, 2005 |
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| Microsoft hails 'strategic shift' |
Software giant Microsoft has announced a major push into online software
services, in what is seen as a move to counter rivals like Google and
Yahoo. Microsoft founder Bill Gates called it a 'revolution' and the
firm's biggest strategic shift in five years.
Several key products and services - from office software to e-mail and
instant messaging services - will be delivered online and on demand.
Similar to Google, Microsoft hopes to finance the move through
advertising. The new services will be called Windows Live and Office
Live. The new service will ultimately replace popular features like MSN
Messenger and Hotmail.
The planned change is a huge gamble for Microsoft, as it could undermine
its two main revenue drivers: the sale of so-called 'shrink-wrapped'
software that needs to be installed on users' computers, and the
licensing of its software to corporate customers. |
| BBC News
Nov 02, 2005 |
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| Silicon chip works on the speed of light |
A silicon chip that can carry light and even slow it down has been
unveiled by IBM researchers. The chip demonstrates some of the essential
techniques for creating high-speed photonic memory, which might one day
make electronic memory obsolete in optical communications networks.
It is more efficient to communicate with photons than electrons as
photons do not interact easily with stray electronic and magnetic fields
nor with each other and so are better for long-distance communications.
However, the same property also makes them hard to store.
Researchers have already slowed light to the speed of a bicycle by
passing it through a cloud of cold atoms, a technique which could be
used to buffer optical data. Other scientists have created tiny tunnels
-waveguides- that can steer photons through otherwise opaque materials.
Now IBM researchers have combined these two techniques. The result is a
silicon chip carved with photon waveguides in which the photons can be
slowed by a factor of 300 by heating the waveguide to change its optical
properties. Such a device could synchronise data streams by slowing some
streams, allowing others to catch up. |
| New Scientist / Nature (vol 483, p 65)
Nov 02, 2005 |
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| Smart directions for green ideas |
An electro-car public transport has been deemed the smartest idea for
using satellite-navigation technology. The application has just
triumphed in an international competition seeking novel ways to employ
Galileo, Europe's soon-to-launch sat-nav system.
The transport application devised by the Vu Log company in Sophia
Antipolis, France, envisages a fleet of 'green' vehicles on city roads.
Each electrically powered mini-car would be equipped with instant and
highly precise positioning equipment. Commuters could use the internet
or their mobile phone to find the nearest vehicle, jump in and start it
with a smartcard, and then drive it to their destination.
The electro-car concept was deemed to be the best in over 200 entries to
this year's Galileo Masters competition. The contest pushes small and
medium-sized enterprises to start thinking now about how they could get
the best out of Europe's satellite-navigation system, due to be
operational by the decade's end. |
| BBC News
Nov 02, 2005 |
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| Invention: Video flasher |
Shooting video in low light normally means using a floodlight, but this
quickly gobbles up batteries in small devices.
Now Philips Lab in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, has a new idea - a
white-light LED that rapidly switches on and off, working only in the
split seconds when its light is really needed.
The camera uses a sensor that collects light at about 30 frames per
second. The timing circuit also sends control pulses to the white LED,
so that it provides light just when the sensor needs it, and does not
waste power while the sensor is sending its signal to memory.
This, Philips reckons, will let low cost camcorders and even camera
phones handle video in dimly lit rooms without flattening batteries
before the home movie, or conference call, is finished. |
| New Scientist
Nov 01, 2005 |
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| Supercomputer doubles own record |
The Blue Gene/L supercomputer has broken its own record to achieve more
than double the number of calculations it can do a second. It reached
280.6 teraflops - that is 280.6 trillion calculations a second. The IBM
machine, at the US Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, has
quadrupled its performance in just 12 months.
The completed Blue Gene/L joins another supercomputing team-mate, called
ASC Purple, to get to work on safeguarding the US's nuclear stockpile.
Purple can do 100 teraflops while it carries out simulations of nuclear
weapons performance.
The machines are part of a decade-long project to develop the fastest
computers in the world. Blue Gene will work on materials ageing
calculations, molecular dynamics, material modelling as well as
turbulence and instability in hydrodynamics. Purple will then use that
information to run 3D weapons codes needed to simulate nuclear weapons
performance quickly. |
| BBC News
Oct 28, 2005 |
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| Finger-vein reader to foil car thieves |
Car thieves could be foiled by a car security system that recognises the
unique pattern of veins on a driver's fingers as they pull the door
handle. The system would stop a thief even if he had stolen the keys to
the car, says Japanese company Hitachi, which has developed the
technology.
A sensor positioned behind the door handle uses near-infrared light to
recognise the pattern of veins across the back of a person's fingers.
The handle is designed to guide a driver's hand into the same position
each time they open the door, ensuring the finger veins are in the same
place for each reading.
Testing information produced by Hitachi suggests that the system is as
accurate as using finger prints, and requires less data to be stored for
each user. Hitachi has developed authentication systems that use finger
veins for controlling access to cash machines, security doors and even
computers. The company has also developed a portable, matchbox-sized
finger vein reader. |
| New Scientist
Nov 02, 2005 |
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| Headset to remotely control humans |
Japan is renowned for its hi-tech gadgets but it has crossed a new
frontier with the prospect of remotely controlling humans. Nippon
Telegraph and Telephone Corp (NTT) has invented a headset that can move
people from left to right at the flick of a joystick. The headset
delivers a weak electrical current just behind the ear affecting the
vestibular system, which controls movement and balance.
When an electrical current is fired, the body shifts its balance towards
the electrode. If the current is strong enough, the person with a
headset will walk in the direction the charge was sent.
The technology builds on similar research by the Cyberkinetics company,
which helps paralysed patients play video games through the electrical
currents created by thoughts, and researchers from State University in
New York, who manipulated the movements of rats by threading their
brains with electric wires. The NTT researchers say they have no
immediate plans for commercial development but are considering the
possibilities for video gaming. |
| The Independent
Nov 01, 2005 |
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| Live speech-translation technology unveiled |
Technology that provides live translation of speech from one language to
another has been revealed by scientists from the International Center
for Advanced Communication Technologies (InterACT), a collaboration
between Carnegie Mellon and the University of Karlsruhe in Germany.
The system almost instantly translates speech from one language to
another by giving a talk in English that was converted simultaneously
into German and Spanish. The researchers also revealed a directional
speaker system that delivers a translated audio feed to just one person
in a room, removing the need for them to wear headphones. And another
concept device projected translated subtitles along the bottom of one
lens of a modified pair of glasses.
An even more futuristic technology was also demonstrated. By attaching
11 electrodes to a subject's face and throat, a computer was able to
generate speech from mouthed gestures alone. The researchers suggest the
system might be used to place cellphone calls in situations where they
are normally banned. |
| New Scientist
Oct 31, 2005 |
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| Bird flu virus infects PCs |
Attackers are exploiting fears over bird flu by releasing a computer
virus attached to an e-mail passing itself off as containing avian flu
information, warned computer firm Panda Software.
According to Panda, the virus Naiva.A masquerades as a word document
with e-mail subject lines such as 'Outbreak in North America' and 'What
is avian influenza?'
When the file is opened, the virus modifies, creates and delete files. A
second part of the virus installs a program that allows hackers to gain
remote control of infected computers. The firm said the virus cannot
spread on its own but needs to be manually distributed via e-mail,
Internet downloads or file transfers. |
| ZDNet / Reuters
Nov 01, 2005 |
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| Building a personalised network of digital devices |
Imagine your alarm wakes you up an hour early because it knows you are
flying abroad, and there is a traffic jam on the way to the airport.
Your coffee maker turns on an hour early too. Your electronic doorkeeper
automatically alarms the house as it senses your mobile phone leaving
the house, your car provides traffic updates as you travel, suggesting a
detour to avoid congestion.
These are the types of service that the ePerSpace project of France
Telecom wants to enable, and once that functionality is there, inventive
companies will be able to design a host of new, currently impossible,
services. The soul of the system is the user profile, which defines user
preferences in news, TV and music. It will contain information about the
users' friends and family, and it will be linked to their calendar to
keep it up to date on their work and life schedule.
The profile resides on a Home Gateway, the hardware system that will be
the heart of your digital life, pumping binary oxygen to all the
elements of your extended network. To make the system work each device
requires a piece of software that identifies itself as part of the
network and details the format it needs to see and display information. |
| Physorg / IST Results
Nov 03, 2005 |
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